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LIBRARY 


M. KNOEDLER & CO. 


556-8 FIFTH AVE. 
NEW YORK 


“Arab Chief and Escort” Sold tor $11, 000, While Van 
_ Marcke’s “Entrance to the Pasture” and Israels’ “The : 
(eee (eee Old Scribe” Go for $10,000 Each. 


' Good prices and enthusiasm charecter-| Daubigny, “Landscape with River; _ 
ized the Sale of the collection of paintings Mr. Otto Bernet, Pere cer ie halsiaiete sisi 2,800! 
of the late Dr. Leslie D. Ward, of Newark, Y editor Fagot Gatherer,” Mr. A. 1.250 
N. J., held last night in Mendelssohn Hall, Dupre, “A Brittany Farm; Mr. Mar 

in West Fortieth Street, wider the Girada) tn BECK ee eek cokcecsece secs ches 4,000 


tion of the American Art Association. ee PEND at the Pool; Messrs. 7,000 
mMhe - Marnier, ; cott WV NES sigzinis sacar aya kee gate as 
| The auditorium was filled with buyers Troyon, “A White and Rea ‘Ox; Mr. 


and spectators, and at times the bidding! Martin Beck ............ccccsececenve ee 2,500 
was spirited, Ths’ total amount realized Fromentin, ‘‘Arabs aves in the 


for seventy-two pictures was $153,28. The|,,°serti’’ Eugene Glaenaer Company 1,760) 
Van Marcke,’ “Pasture Near Tre- 


highest price of the night, and an unusu- port; Eugene Glaenzer Company.. 4,100 
ally g00d one for .a picture of its size and | Fromentin, \ 4 Young Arab--La 
M 


quality, by the well known painter of|_ Halte;” Bernet, agent........ +» 1,800 
Tgabey, “Auberge de lHeu de 


mounted sons of the desert, was the $11,600 France;” Me ow. W. Séaman........ 2,600 
paid for Sehreyer’s “Arab Chief ail Es-} Clays, ‘‘Le Scheldt, Lillo Pres @’An- | 
vort. " vers; Mr. Beaman...... PEER EN rer + 1,100 
Puget sty ; >| Rico, “Venice Canal;’’ Mr. Seaman., 1,800 
| Van Marcke’s “Entrance to the Pasture Jacque, “Bergerie;’ Mr. Seaman..... 5,100 
orought $10,000 from an American buyer,| Dieterle, “Cattle in the Meadows,” 
while ‘“‘The Old Scribe,” by Israels, which}, Knoedler & Co.......... i OT ORS 8 1,600 
won the Great Prize in the Paris Hxposi-|Scbreyer, “L’Abreuvoir,” Mr. J. Fi | | 
Hien of 4904, was bought for $10,000 by Harris naa an DRM bid) Wale Ved w iWin we errre dials, bogey’ 5,400 
Boussod, Valadon & Go., of Paris. Neuhuys, “Divided Interest,” Mr. W. Pape 
| Although most of the canvases were py|_ W- Seaman.........0.s6..., voter ees 2100 
foreign artists, the works of American Israels, “Old Man Feeding a Cat, | 
painters were in demand, Mr. William ee ore - np Hei! be) 5,000) 
Macbeth, a dealer, 900 fo nt* aulow athedral of St. Mark," Nid 
ee See et OA hate Datar We auba. \e ocs il 1,300 


‘while a painting | Te when is Mur- 
Pe vee eee aimee feu in ee Van Marcke, “The Réd Cow,” Mr, 


h are. It Ww | 
ope ledelbetlaa' ala taiee baal’ ye nomen: ipaq shpel AEs! EE OMAETEE: 0007 A mR 4,200 


‘which all pres seemed to enjoy. 
i PPE SHER’ ver emer ibe }Harpignies, ‘““By the Seashore,” Mr. 


outcomes of the battle of the bids were 


: : A : Per OLRM NEWS sate <6 fs wate da Gieene 2,300. 
joften applauded, as when thé representa- tar fe aie 

tive of a well known collector called the ae Neh rec trim col rit laa Charge, 

Hast $100 which put Mr. Martin Beck out Pe LOCH IN Ss ummm ANAS es 4+ 2085412 fied ty 6,900 
3 : Mesdag, Wr -ading the Fishing 

{of the contest for the Schreyer. Boat.’ Mr. W. B. Thar 1,080 
Here is the list of the pictures that sold Br ot “Sn =it tite,’ Me 
for more than $1,000. The name of the| Pret prime ‘ ; ; 

Y He oris uae PRD PAU aiia wes 6s yo yeied saad +a. 3,600 


lartist is given first, thén the title, the new Patiiel Rideway Knight, “Gossips at 


lowner and the price paid;— We 
Vibert, “The Discovered Hiding ae Bridge;’ Messrs. Knoedler & a 
-theee CC a ie rs ir ed ge 


; att : a9. 
Place; Mr Pi W. ROuss.. 4s i. ¢5s612$2;800 (eréiis. “On ~ Guarda — Tigress and 


Detaille, | “Light Infantry Soldier;’’: Cubs”? Mn sioha Wation. 2.150 
Mr. Frederic C. Pemteldi..s+..04- ds. 2,200 Ziem, “Barly Morning; Messrs. th 
[etetaeotiary © OP e cre euMment;” Bir. Knoedler & CO..scccesss. 3,000 

| te ae “tA. Gra #1 Wavy tae, 1,400 Schreyer, An Aralb Chief Ba Bs. 
A. HB, ool ; daze ea soem tad eort;?” Mr. Otto Bernet, agent....... 11,600 
William Macbeth BaRtt ss veesiees sePhase 3,900 |van Marcke, ‘Entrance to the Pas- 
J. Francis Murphy, “Sundown;” Mr. ture;’ Mr, J. Franklin: .........). 10,000 
| Otto Bernet, Ogeng...+.. PO Sohieade e 4. 2,600 Isruels, “The Old Scribe;”’ Messrs, 
Daniel Ridgway Knight, “At Poissy— Boussod, Valadon & Co...... ii AW 10,00¢ 
| Your Health;” Mr. Bernet....siecssee 1,700 Bougitereau, ‘The Little Pilferers:” 
Henner, ‘Jeune Fille Lisant;" Mr. Mery lat A Orddaebe ies... c.ccas.s:, 3,00¢ 
We) Wo ROAMaMisgnityo as seins cons stnses 2,500} There were two pictures by Mlle. Rosa 
Corot, “ha Chaumiére aux Sureaux, Bonheur in the collection which brought 
), Normandie;*? Mr W. A. Clark....... raapfeene? low prices, ome, ‘the ‘Head of a 


Corot, “Clairiere;'? Mr. John Watson.. Donkey,’’ selling for $800, and a y 
’ picture 
Meroe, “A Road in the Forest:” M. a oe a Percheron, forwhich $50 less was 
| Knoedler & Covessseesessererecase 4M00| paid ° oe 


| exhibition in the Ameri- 
tae square, poaet, 


vening 
tg WP. 


a special 
y from 8 
was sold onj)-friday 
week at oe Sele Hall, 
east way. 

> pictures in this 
six of them being water colors 
pastel. The rest are oil paint- 
“were gathered together al- 
ively during the last twelve 
years. The date of purchase 
TS, nm most instances, in the cata- 
from this informing document 
that 1903 was the most indus- 
Ward's years as a collec- 
early as 1899 he had purchased a 
an Alfred Stevens, a Mesdag, a 


hier, a Schenck, a Mauve, a Ridg- 
night, a Clays, a Martin Rico, a 
naulow, a Schreyer, a Ziem and 
nheur’s “Percheron.’’ Upon ‘that 
dation. he-built his collection. Per- 
he Perk no finer artistic appre- 
after his esthetic judgment was 


z ed than when he bought the Alfred 
'| Stevens “Marine.” Seascapes by this 
jartist are almost as rare as those of 
John H, 
e 


fF sral’ pictures, it is noted in the cata- 
logue, were in the William T. Evans col- 
de in 1900, notably a landscape by 


Twachtman. They were both 
painters, handling salt water 
ically as their more usual sub- 


nt, foo—John Bunyan Bristol's “Old 
len Bridge,” and an early J. Francis 

y. These are the principal Amevi- 
ean paintings in the exhibition. .Wyant 
‘Murphy uphold the American tradi- 
| ‘wery satisfactorily in the company 
‘of the French and Dutch painters, whose 
tyogue was at its height when.this collec- 
tion was assembled, Corot being excepted. 
The chief French and Dutch -pictures 
were secured in 1903, while Mr. Ward was 
abroad. Most of. them were purchased 
‘| from Tedesco Freres and Boussod, Vallo- 
don & Co. They include three Corots, 
none of them very large, Detaille’s 
“French Infantry Soldier,” two Dau- 
bignys, a Diaz, a Dupre—a second Dupre 
Was secured five years later—and_ repre- 
sentatives of the work of Troyon, Fro- 
Mentin, Van Marcke, Jacque, Schreyer, 
Israels, Harpignies, Mesdag and Jules 
Breton. Other dealers through whom can- 
‘| ¥ases were secured are Franz Buffa and 

Zoengeh, The Hague; M. Goldschmidt & 

Co., Frankfort; M. Knoedler & Co,, Ar- 

thur Tooth & Sons, and William Schaus, 

New York, and Georges Petit, Paris. The 

pames of the dealers have their import- 
-anee as proving the genuineness of the 

attributions, a regrettable necessity In a 


ey the late pe eine 


Petes Clays 4) Martin Rito, 
ander. H: Wyant—a very interesting 


| 


” THE ARGUMENT.” 
BY C7. C /IEISSONIER. 


Reproduced by Courtesy of the American Art ne eat: 


If quantity counts, J. B. C, Corot, Emile 
von Marcke and Adolf Schreyer were 
Mr. Ward’s favorite painters. Bach of 
them is represented by three canvases. 
tt is quite possible that the verdict of 
the majority will indicate the supreme 
popularity of Van Marcke’s “Entrance to 
Pasture,” No. 70, a scene “impregnated 
with the serenity and wholesomeness of 
pastoral life,” as the writer of the cata- 
logue remarks. The composition is~good, 
the cattle are well drawn, the light of 
the hour is suggested—if the painter had 


{been born fifty years later he would have |! 


| reproduced it more faithfuHy. ‘While it is 
best. of the three, 
first-rate Van Mareke’s. 
Mme. Marie, Dieterle, has a 

‘Cattle in the Meadows.” Troyon’s 
White and Red Ox,”’ 
eves—do all pasture lots lie to the east ?-~ 
is 4 good ox, moving along in 
manner, but its ‘“‘pelt’’—the catalogue’s 
word, not ours—is not as lifelike as that 
of Van Marcke's ‘Red Cow.’’ -Rosa Bon- 
heur dcesn’t look very great in this com- 
pany of animal painters. Charles 
Jacque’s *‘Bergerie’’ is a picture of sheep 
in a fold. Bovgard shows animals in his 


picture of 
Bis 


the two others are! 
Hiis daughter, } 


with the stin in its} 


ox-line} 


But there will be those, including the 
|| present writer, who find most satisfac- 
tion in the largest of the three Corot 
landscapes, while others will choose the } 
ltireer Israels, ‘ue Vieux Scribe,” No. (1, 
Here Israels is at his best. It is a pic- 
|ture of an old man writing at a table. 
With his left hand he holds his scroll! 
of parchment wide open; with the other 
he writes. There is characterization in 
ithe face of the ‘‘old Rabbi,”” whose na- 
} tionality and vocation can hardly be mis- 
|} taken. The shape of his head and his in- 
tellectual face bewray him, The painter 
made an effort to bring the light into 
the room through the adjacent window, 
illumining with it the old man’s face and 
writing hand. Both of the hands are 
expressive. 


There is a hint of the purple moderns 
love so well in Corot’s “A Road in the 
Forest, Ville D’Avray,’’ but it is in his 


j 
1 
t 
i 


| 


| 


“La Chaumiere Aux Sureaux, Normandie” ; 
i 


—grown a trifle. dark, it is true—that 
most characteristic. Here the. French- 
man’s tenderness -and sentiment are 


blended with his subleties of treatment 


land ‘Papa's’? technique discloses 
It is artistically seen and executed. 


oS 


is } 


itself. | 


‘Interior of a Stable’—why paint such a There are two Clays; he is colorful, 
subject? Daubigny’s little donkey is a}/as usual. 
joy. ; The Henne is Hennery. The m: issing 
Then there is ‘‘A Setter’’ by Rosseau, ia in Dupre’s ‘‘A Brittany Farm, Isle Adam,’ 
tieress and cubs in Gerome’s “On is interesting though juicy. Mesdag is | 
Guard,” Josef Israels is ‘seen through’ | pretty. Viber is human. A. B. Frost 
“An Old Man Feeding a Cat,” and’ Fred- |) bas. humor. Schleyer and Fromentin are 
eric Remington through a ranch pen) ¢haracteristic anecdotal, but the pic- 
with horses. ituresqueness of the Arab loses its” fas- 
Ziem’s color is red hot;* Isa- 


dination. 


x 


ee 


like 
Bou- 


Those who 
Knights—Ridgway and Aston, 


énamel, 


like 


Key S 


¢ 
© 
o 
cs 
3 
fe) 
g 
G 
= 
es 
% 
& 
3g 
on 
5 
” 
2& 


ereau,the 


Gu 


-Jules Breton and Van Blass 


pere et fils- 
are photographic. 


Detaille is meticulous; 


ed, 


Meissonier is detail 


st spurious canyases. 
Oe eee 


Ss ON FREE VIEW 


MADISON SQUARE SOUTH, NEW YORK 


THE DAY OF SALE, INCLUSIVE 


THE 


COLLECTED BY THE LATE 


OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY 


AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


FORTIETH STREET, EAST OF BROADWAY 


hy FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY (18TH, 1911 
BEGINNING AT 8.15 0’ CLOCK 


Ear THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES 


FROM SATURDAY, JANUARY SEVENTH, UNTIL THE MORNING OF 


VALUABLE PAINTINGS 


DR. LESLIE D. WARD 


EDITION LIMITED TO ONE HUNDRED AND § 


_ DE LUXE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE 


OF THE 


VALUABLE PAINTINGS 


BY 


; “<THE MEN OF 1830,” THEIR CONTEMPORARIES 
AND MODERN DUTCH MASTERS 


FORMING THE PRIVATE COLLECTION OF THE LATE 


oe DR. LESLIE D. WARD 
OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY 
TO BE SOLD AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE BY ORDER 


OF EDGAR B. WARD, JACOB E. WARD AND THE FIDELITY TRUST COMPANY 
oe ' OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, EXECUTORS 


AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


FORTIETH STREET, EAST OF ate NEW YORK 


ON THE EVENING HEREIN STATED 


THE SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED BY 
MR. THOMAS E. KIRBY, OF 


THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, MANAGERS 
NEW YORK 
1911 


THE LENT & GRAFF CO., NEW Y 


COPYRIGHT, 1910, BY 


Ai A 


CONDITIONS OF SALE 


1. The highest Bidder to be the Buyer, and if any dispute arises between 
two or more Bidders, the Lot so in dispute shall be immediately put up again 


ae and re-sold. 


2. The Auctioneer reserves the right to reject any bid which is merely 


a sooabil or fractional advance, and EAE Ia in his judgment, likely to affect 


the Sale injuriously. 
8. The Purchasers to give their names and addresses, and to pay down 


_ a cash deposit, or the whole of the Purchase-money, if required, in default of 
_ which the Lot or Lots so ee to be immediately put up again and re- 


pe PAF 


4, The Lots to be taken away at the Buyer’s Expense and Risk within 


if twenty-four hours from the conclusion of the Sale, unless otherwise specified 
by the Auctioneer or Managers previous to or at the time of Sale, and the 


Dy remainder of the Purchase-money to be absolutely paid, or otherwise settled 


for to the satisfaction of the Auctioneer, on or before delivery; in default of 


which the undersigned will not hold themselves responsible if the lots be lost, 


stolen, damaged, or destroyed, but they will be left at the sole risk of the 


purchaser. 


Be While the undersigned will not hold themselves responsible for the 
correctness of the description, genuineness, or authenticity of, or any fault 
or defect in, any Lot, and make no Warranty whatever, they will, upon re- 
ceiving previous to date of Sale trustworthy expert opinion in writing that 
any Painting or other Work of Art is not what it is represented to be, use 
every effort on their part to furnish proof to the contrary; failing in which, 
the object or objects in question will be sold subject to the declaration of 
the aforesaid expert, he being liable to the Owner or Owners thereof for 
damage or injury occasioned thereby. 

6. To prevent inaccuracy in delivery, and inconvenience in the settle- 
ment of the Purchases, no Lot can, on any account, be removed during the Sale. 

_% Upon failure to comply with the above conditions, the money de- 


posited in part payment shall be forfeited; all Lots uncleared within one day 


from conclusion of Sale (unless otherwise specified as above) shall be re-sold 
by public or private sale, without further notice, and the deficiency (if any) 
attending such re-sale shall be made good by the defaulter at this Sale, together 
with all charges attending the same. This Condition is without prejudice to 
the right of the Auctioneer to enforce the contract made at this Sale, without 
such re-sale, if he thinks fit. 

8. The Undersigned are in no manner connected with the business of the 
cartage or packing and shipping of purchases, and although they will afford 
to purchasers every facility for employing careful carriers and packers, they 
will not hold themselves responsible for the acts and charges of the parties 
engaged for such services. 


Tur AMERICAN ART PE AMR SARE MANAGERS. 
THOMAS E. KIRBY, Auctioneer. 


ATER COLORS AND PASTELS 


SALE AT MENDELSSOH} 


FortietH STREET, East of BROADWAY 


ON FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY iar, 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT 8.15 O’CLOCK 


~~" 


_ SPANISH 
Contemporary Y ; 
WAITING 
Height, 14 inches ; Width, 10 inches. 

WATER COLOR 


. Watteau costume, seated on a low wall, faces us. Her skirt 
Bea crimson striped satin, with greenish-white panniers, and her 


. boys fs Becca a. eer aee 
ee N 


; o. 2 
_ JEAN BAPTISTE EDOUARD DETAILLE 
i FRENCH 
(1848- ys 
A SOLDIER OF THE GUARD 
Sa Height, 134 inches ; Width, 8% inches.) _f, © tor aa paar 
WATER COLOR 


His uniform comprises a black busby, a slaty-blue tunic, a rose-colored 
jacket slung from the shoulders, and white breeches. He rests the butt 
of his musket on the ground. 


Signed and dated at the lower left: Epovarp Drraiiie, 1899. 


No. 3 
A. B. FROST 
AMERICAN 
(1851- ) 
A FRIENDLY DRINK 
A es ada Height, 19 inches ; Width, eravA ae 
WATER COLOR 


A MAN with a comforter around his neck has called and is joining his 
host in a drink of rye. The two stand facing each other in front of a 
mahogany sideboard. A rag carpet covers the floor. 


Signed at the lower left: A. B. Frost. 


No. 4 
CHARLES OLIVIER DE PENNE 
FRENCH 


(1831-1897) 


FOX HOUNDS AND BLOOD HOUNDS 


Hai co Height, 22% inches ; Width, 16 i ae: yA 
WATER COLOR ) 


BENEATH a tree trunk, on which hang a huntsman’s coat and horn, are two 
blood hounds and two white, black and tawny hounds, coupled. 


Signed at the lower left: C. O. pz PENNE. 


"FRENCH 
(1881-1897) 
_ FRENCH HOUNDS 
Haight, 22% inches ; Width, 16 inches. 


is : Sh 
ea ‘ WATER COLOR aie 
oo en 


ae (Companion to the preceding 


No. 6 
GASTON LA TOUCHE 
FRENCH 
Contemporary 
THWARTED 
Height, 31 inches ; Width, 18% inches. 


rie *? eae mee is 
> shes q 


A YOUNG man has his arm round the waist of a girl and is attempting to 
kiss her. But she interposes her hand between their faces. 


Signed and dated at the lower left: Gaston La Toucue, 798. 


No. 7 
PAUL BLONDEAU 
FRENCH 
Contemporary 
WASHERWOMEN BESIDE A LAKE IN FRANCE 
Height, 2434 inches ; Length, 30 inches. 7 


WATER COLOR ( 


Looe 


THE bank of the lake, stretching from the left of the foreground across the 


scene, is gay with the bright costumes of washerwomen. In the immediate 


front two of them are standing with their backs to the water before a sort 
of table, on which one of them has been pounding the linen with a mallet. 
They have paused in their work to talk to a girl in a red waist, who is 
arranging some laundry on a trestle. 


Signed at the loner left: Paut BuonpEau, Paris. 


OS i ee 


PAINTINGS 


asin s 


oakel 4, 


No. 8 
_JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 
FRENCH 

a (1840-1902) 
A YOUNG CARDINAL 


oe a 7 4 4 f 

"6 a CO: - Height, 634 inches ; Width, 534 inches. “J > Wr sea 

eS ; left. ‘He has curly black hair and wears a velvet skull cap. The rose- 

-_ eolored cape is fastened at the neck with a ribbon bow and turned back, so 

that it displays a white ribbon striped with golden yellow. Beneath this is 
a glimpse of violet cassock. 

; io | 


| Signed at the lower right: J. G. Visert. 


Purchased from Artuur Tootu & Sons, 1899. 


No. 9 
WILLIAM HART, N. A. 


AMERICAN 
(1823-1894) 
AUTUMN LANDSCAPE AND CATTLE 
rag ** Height, 7% inches ; Length, 10% ial sucka ares Gees 


In the background on the left spreads the yellow foliage of a clump of 
oaks, luminous with the light of a greenish-blue sky. The glow envelops 
a white and a dun cow which are feeding near the tree trunks, while in the 
shadow that extends across the right of the foreground stand a black cow 
and a red one with white face. 

Signed and dated at the lower left: Wm. Hart, 1881. 


No. 10 
ETIENNE PROSPER BERNE-BELLECOUR 
FRENCH 


(1838-1910) 


A SHARP SHOOT. 
Poo" | Panel tosh 
Height, 12% inches; Width, 6 inches. 


A ZOUAVE in red fez, blue jacket, red loose breeches and white gaiters, 
stands in profile, facing to the right. He rests his weight on the right leg, 
as he takes from the pouch at his hip a cartridge to put in the rifle which is 
held parallel with his waist. Beside him is a tree stem at the foot of which 
lies a bunch of creamy buff material. 


Signed at the lower right: EK. Berne-Br.Liecour. 


Collection of Isaac Waker, New York, 1900. 


No. 11 
ALFRED STEVENS 
BELGIAN 


(1824-1906) 


MARINE 


LL / "sail Height, 1234 inches; Widthp9% py 5 ° j : 
t in (3. i mM 


THIS unusual subject by the painter of fashionable genre shows an expanse 
of shoal water, bounded in the distance on the left by a grassy hill. A 
fishing boat is running in with the tide, which meets the wind, so that the 
water is churned and flecked with tones of cream, buff, olive and gray- 
green. 


Signed at the lower left: A. Stevens. 
Purchased from Muss. Lx Roy, Paris, 1899. 


i > 


| No. 12 

JOHN BUNYAN BRISTOL, N. A. 
AMERICAN 
(1826-1909) 

OLD WOODEN BRIDGE, UPPER CONNECTICUT 


fs = mee , see Height, 8% inches; Length, 16 inches. A 
. fg 4 re od erg: 2 inches eng: anc ee, Fp fa 
Ee A STREAM extends from the left foreground diagonally back between rather 


: ) steep banks. It is crossed by a bridge, the wooden roof and sides of which 
<i 2 are silvery-gray, with traces of having been red. It leads to a flat meadow, 
yellow with light, beyond which appears a pleasant prospect of houses 
among trees. In the distance are grayish-drab hills, succeeded by a faint 
blue range. | 


Signed at the lower right: J. B. Bristot. 
Collection of Wi T. Evans, New York, 1900. Catalogue No. 16. 


No. 18 
LYELL CARR 
AMERICAN 
(1857- —) 
THE WHITE MILL u ey es 
CE ey Vireo /| i 
de Height, 11 inches; Length, 14 inches. 


A PonpD in the foreground reflects a large patch of the sky’s whiteness and 
farther back the white wall of a mill that stands on the water’s edge. The 
mill has a long pitched roof, stained dull yellow and lead-color, which shows 
against a bank of olive and brownish-green foliage. 


Signed at the lower left: Lyziu Carr. 


> 
arty 


| og yer a 
f 5 


Were 


f@ 


wT 
a 


bh 


fs eee eat y | 
ar = ake are Peay : ea * . ; | : 
sr ene Sete ar : ek en 
= ae stay a Oe iss ‘ ets ix Se 
> ers - Te, : Phan 
No. 14 ete 
EUGEN VON BLAAS 
BELGIAN a 
(1843- +) 
| IDEAL HEAD 1 fy (2) 
ore I bake KD. 


Height, 13 ees Width, 9% inches. 


THE girl’s figure is turned to the fruit. the head being in profile, face the 3 ee 


left. Chestnut hair lies in waves over her forehead and is gathered in a " 
knot at the crown. It is again waved at the back of the neck, © ie wear s aa 
a gold earring and a bit of white lace shows on her bosom. 


Signed at the upper right : EucEn von Buaas, 


No. 15 


EUGEN VON BLAAS 


BELGIAN 

Fp (1843-00 een) 
THE BRUNETTE 

ofa Height, 1¢xnches va Wid <0 acho 49 


PLACED against a blue background are the head and bust of an attragtive 

girl. She has black hair lying in ringlets over her forehead, brown“eyes 
beneath black eyebrows, and red lips. Clusters of seed pearls hang from 
her ears, and three strings of coral beads encircle her neck. The lace edge © 
of a chemise shows low down on her bosom, and her shoulders are covered 
with pearly satin sleeves, striped with yellow and red. 


Signed at the upper right : Eucen von Buaas, 


“- 


No. 16 
ETIENNE PROSPER BERNE-BELLECOUR 


FRENCH | 
(1838-1910) 


SIGHTING THE ENEMY 
ef ied Height, 1334 inches; Width, 934 inches. /— eV AMAL 
A FRENCH infantry officer has lowered his binoculars and is studying a map. 
He holds it in his left hand, as it rests upon the timber uprights that 
support the earthwork on which he is seated. His uniform consists of a 


black cap and tunic, a blue sash, and blue breeches stuck into high boots. 
He carries a water bottle at his waist and a sword. 


Signed at the lower right: E. Berne-Be.iecovur. 
Purchased from M. KNoxpLer & Co., New York, 1903. 


No. 17 
FREDERIC REMINGTON, A. N. A. 


AMERICAN 
(1861-1909) 


WAITING FOR HIS MASTER 
/| es - 
FE / g: 5 Height, 12% inches; Length, 18% inches. ri ea toa ra 
A MUSTANG, whose white coat is marked with gray-blue shadows, stands 
across the foreground, his head toward the right, with the reins hanging to 
the ground. On his back is a blanket, striped with red, white and blue, 
while from the pommel of the saddle hangs a bright yellow cloth, edged 
with green. 


Signed at the lower left: Freprric Remineron. 


No. 18 
A. SIMOSWIKY 
RUSSIAN 
MEDITATION 


Height, 15 inches ; Length, 18 inches. 


Baa apa PANEL Wns Tr eee 


A WOMAN is reclining on a dark green bank, overlooking a lake of deep blue 
water. Nude to the waist, she leans her right elbow on the ground, while 
her left arm parallels the curve of her hip. Orange-chestnut hair fringes 
her forehead and falls in profusion over her shoulder. A white drapery is 
wrapped around her right forearm and drawn across her waist, and her 
lower limbs are swathed in a rosy-purplish drapery. This is in shadow, 
while the light illumines her torso and face. 


Signed at the lower left: M. Simoswiky. 


No. 19 
HENDRIK WILLEM MESDAG 
DUTCH 


(1831-1902) 


A SCHEVENINGEN FISHING BOAT 


> Ass Height, 15 inches ; eal 11 Offer bare 
THE sky is swollen with pinkish, me -gTay ring Sl churned into éccasional 


whiteness. A strip of cold slaty-green marks the horizon, whence the shoal 
water, churned by the wind, approaches in swells, alternately white and 
olive-green. On the right of the water, in the foreground, stand two men 
handling a net. Farther back lies a fishing boat with a buff sail and a red 
one, the latter showing the port number, ‘‘Sch. 9.”’’ 


Signed at the lower right; H. W. Mxspaa. 


Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1899. 


=] 


=” 
a 
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. 
‘S 
re 
7 a 
SS 


Lay 


- The cardinal is in full regalia, a 


No. 20 
JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 
FRENCH 
(1840-1902) 
THE DISCOVERED HIDING PLACE 


Height, 18% inches ; Width, 1434 inches. 


a fie”’ PANEL (Vr. Uv 


A CARDINAL, with a faculty of pene- 
trating observation, has either de- 
tected an intrigue or discovered proof ° 
of one that he had already suspected. 
He has found a tell-tale letter, and, 
after having satisfied his curiosity as 
to the writer and the addressee, is 
stooping to replace it in its hiding- 
place. This is beneath a candelabrum, 
which stands on a gilded console-table 
at the left of the room. The design 
of the candelabrum is a black bronze 
cupid, supporting a gilded torch. 


magnificent star decorates his left 
breast and a Maltese cross is sus- 
pended from an orange-colored ribbon which passes around his neck. The 
apartment is handsomely arranged in the style of Louis Quinze. 


Signed at the loner right: J. G. Visert. 
Purchased from M. Knorpirr & Co., New York, 1903. 


Bs 2 Ny 4 


No. 


21 


JEAN BAPTISTE EDOUARD DETAILLE 


FRENCH 


(1848- 


Height, 18 inches ; 


Collection of M. Tasourrer, Paris, 1882. 


Purchased from Txvesco Freres, Paris, 1903. 


LI GH T INFANTRY SOLDIE Lee 


) 


Width, 15 ad: Vane fiide 
THE horse, a deep bay, is seen in 
profile, facing the left, and the rider’s 
back is toward the spectator. His 
uniform includes a blue cap and 
tunic and crimson breeches which 
are almost hidden by a bundle of 
hay suspended in a net from the 
pommel. The blanket and overcoat, 
rolled over the front and back of 
the saddle, and the saddle cloth, 
are blue, faced with red. The stock 
of the carbine shows over the back 
of the horse and a sword hangs from 
the trooper’s waist. 


Signed at the lower left: Epovarp Drrat.e. 


No. 


22 


JEAN CHARLES MEISSONIER 


FRENCH 


THE ARGUMENT 


J ALG 0 -°* Height, 1834 inches ; 


Width, 15% inches. Z, : CeLEL 


TuIs picture, by the son and pupil of ggg 


Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier, repre- 


sents a scene on the porch of Meisson- 
ier’s house at Poissy, with portraits of 
the artist and Berne-Bellecour. They 
are seated with a companion at a table 
which projects from the brick parapet. 
All are in cavalier costume; the one 


on the left in a pale blue jacket over HRS 


full knickerbockers of greenish-blue. 


On the right of the table sits one in § 


apricot-red and another in a suit of ™ 


drab velvet. There is a vine arbor 


overhead, and beyond the wall appears 
a view of the town, with a church —* 
-- toward the right. The scene is per- 


vaded with clear light, which brings 
costumes. Meanwhile distance lends 
town and landscape. 


Signed at the lower left: Cuartes Mrissonier. 
Purchased from Jutxs Orume, New York, 1899. 


PB ip 2-65 Heyy | 


into bright relief the gaiety of the 
the contrast of subdued color to the 


No. 28 


W. J. BOOGAARD 


_ BELGIAN 


Contemporary 
INTERIOR OF A STABLE 


Height, 12% inches; Length, 16 inch 


[Oe | Ae Db danni fiance 


ee 


A RACK, filled with hay, extends along the back wall of the stable. On the 
left a bright bay horse with black tail toward the spectator is feeding. 
Beside him, turned three-quarters to the front, is a white horse. On the 
right a light roan, with bridle on, is having his saddle either fixed or 


removed by a stable man. 


Signed and dated at the loner right: W. J. BooGaarp, 1879. 


No. 24 


AUGUST FREDERIC ALBRECHT SCHENCK 


GERMAN 
(1823-1900) 

SHEEP IN SNOWSTORM 
Ave Height, 1534 inches; Length, 1934 inches: ie 
ee I Vr. Ue pees 
THE sky is smoky with leaden-yellowish vapor. Snow is falling, and a 
white shroud covers the boulders and heather on the mountain side. Strug- 
gling against the snow and the wind, a flock of sheep is descending. The 
shepherd, with his buff overcoat and cape blown about him, leans on his 
staff, while his dog watches beside him. 


Signed at the lower left: Scuencx. 


Purchased from Fiscuet, Apter & Scuwartz, New York, 1899. 


No. 25 


ANTON MAUVE 


DUTCH 
(1838-1888) 
AN OLD COTTAGE, OSTERBECK, HOLLAND 


Height, 12% inches ; Length, 16 inches. 


eee PANEL ( Vi. Ge aes 


THIs very interesting early example, painted in bright clear coloring, shows 
a low cottage extending back from the right of the foreground. The roof 
~ is covered with pinkish-drab thatch, which toward the eaves gives way to 
pink and mossy-green fluted tiles. ‘The wall consists partly of white plaster 
work, over which clusters a green vine, and partly of vertical strips of 
wood. Beside it is a refuse heap on which four hens are scratching. Above 
this extends a pole on which a woman is hanging some garments. Her 
figure is distinguished by a dark brown headdress and a geranium-colored 
tippet, seen against a mass of yellow-lighted foliage. Back of this is a 
bush of darker hue, while in the farther distance appears a villa with a 
mansard roof. 


Signed at the lower left: A. Mauve. 


Purchased Jrom Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1899. 


a 
a 


No. 26 


ALEXANDER H. WYANT, N. A. 


AMERICAN 
(1836-1892) 


A GRAY DAY 


Height, 16 inches ; Length, 22 inches. f 


THE expanse of tawny grass is interrupted on the right of the foreground by 
a little pool fringed with reedy grass. It reflects the light from a sky 
filled with luminous creamy vapor over very pale blue. A sapling grows 
beside the pool and in the middle distance is a screen of small trees, while 
against the horizon lie faint gray-blue hills. Low toned and ina minor key 
the landscape is impregnated with the tender melancholy in which the poetic 
feeling of this artist frequently found expression. 


Og oo 


Signed at the lower lefi: A. H. Wyant. 
Collection of Witt1am T. Evans, New York, 1900. Catalogue No. 56. 


No. 27 
ALEXANDER P. GARZA 


ITALIAN 


‘ 


Contemporary 


LAUNCHING THE ROW BOAT 


si sy: oo Height, 18 inches; Length, 25% Ze fs 4 4 peg eet p 


In the center of the foreground a fisherman in brown trousers an ay 
shirt, with his back to us, is steadying a boat which is lifted on the curve 
of a breaking wave. Meanwhile a woman, standing in the stern, pushes off 
from the sand with an oar. She is dressed in a white cap, amber-colored 
waist and dull rose skirt. Sails dot the distance, and a bit of green-covered 
cliff appears at the left. 


_ Signed at the lower right: Atexanprer P. Garza. 


No. 28 
JOSE MIRALLES 
SPANISH 
FISHER GIRLS 


Height, 14 inches ; Length, 26 inches. : ; 
/ fave o eig inches ; Leng wo Cas we repens 
THE tide is out and a fishing boat lies on the sand at the left. As two fisher 


girls, wearing white caps and carrying baskets, approach, one of them turns 
to another girl who kneels in the act of fastening her shoe. Two figures 
appear in the background, wading in the shallow water. 


Signed at the lower left: J. MiRa.ies. 


Pele eye ee ee +. a en eee os ‘ 2 


No. 29 
J. FRANCIS MURPHY, N. A. 


AMERICAN 
(1853-*  ) | 
SUNDOWN | 
Height, 16 inches; Length, 22 inches.  / : 
VV grrr rene 


THE sky is astir with fawn-colored clouds, ragged and scattered, showing 
intervals of primrose and an orange bar across the horizon. In the middle 
distance, on the left, stands a clump of brown oaks, while nearer to the 


wy iv aes 


front, on the right, is another group of trees in which a maple stem with 
claw-like roots shows conspicuously. 


Signed and dated at the lower left: J. Francis Murpny, ’86. 


Collection of Witt1am T. Evans, New York, 1900. Catalogue No. 47. 


No. 80 
DANIEL RIDGWAY KNIGHT 


AMERICAN 
(1838- ) 


AT POISSY, “YOUR HEALTH” 


/ oe Ff at coi Height, 21% inches; Width, 18 inches. é , bo ee 
Nini a 


A YOUNG girl is standing in front of a bed of poppies, whose gray-green 
crinkly leaves are interspersed with pink, purple and crimson flowers. In 
the act of raising a wooden water-bottle to her lips, she turns to look 
toward the front. She is dressed in a yellow cap, fawn-colored jacket, and 
a pale blue skirt which is tucked up over an olive brown petticoat. Beyond 
the picket-gate of the garden a meadow extends to a river. 


Signed at the lower left: Ripeway Knieut, Paris. 


Purchased from Jutes Orume, New York, 1899. 


ee soa 


¥. 


No. 31 


JULES WORMS 


FRENCH 
(1832- ) 


DEPARTURE OF A SPANISH TROOPER 


) Br ?: Height, 17% inches ; Length, ys. ee re 


IN a small patio a Spanish trooper is fastening a striped scarlet-green and 
yellow saddle-cloth upon his mule. He turns for a moment to speak to a 
small boy at his side, who trails the butt end of a carbine on the floor. At 
the foot of a short flight of stairs on the right a woman stands holding the 
soldier’s snuff-brown cloak. She has a rose in her black hair and wears a 
pale blue fringed shawl, and a pink skirt caught up over a red _ petticoat. 
On the left of the scene a duck appears in a doorway, and eT another 
door, in the rear, is a view of pink-lavender hills. 


Signed at the lower right: J. Worms. 


No. 82 
JEAN JACQUES HENNER 


FRENCH 
(1829-1905) 


JEUNE FILLE LISANT 


Height, 2134 inches ; Width, 15 inches j 
ae Up. Wt tate. 


THE girl’s head is seen in profile, slightly fl toward the book which 
she holds in her right hand, but the bust is turned three-quarters to the 
front. The hue of the flesh is of camellia whiteness, the lips being a pale 
geranium, with the features modeled in tones of olive. The golden chestnut 
hair, drawn loosely down above the temples, falls in rippling waves over the 
back of the neck. A drapery, low on the bosom, is indicated sketchily in 
tones of rose and pink with golden-brown shadows. A cool light from the 
left partly illumines the girl’s hair, and bathes the whiteness of her face 
and neck and bosom. These are invested with the exotic charm and evan- 
escent quality so characteristic of the artist’s rendering of girlish beauty. 


oS Oe 


Signed at the lower right: J. J. HENNER. 


Purchased from BERHEIMER JEUNE ET FILS, Paris, 1902. 


No. 33 


PAUL JEAN CLAYS 


BELGIAN 


ore. ‘ ee (1819-1900) ee 
3 / 
| 


CALM ON THE SCHELDT 
Height, 1034 inches ; Length, 1534 inches. 


In the sheltered water of the western branch of the Scheldt, a square 
rigger and a fishing boat are lying. The former has creamy-white sails, 
and the latter a golden-amber mainsail and yellow jib. Among their crews 
is a sprinkling of crimson caps. In front, a man is rowing a boat in which 
four persons are seated. To the left lies a cluster of shipping, in which the 
spars of a bark show above the brown and white sails of luggers. The dull 
orange and yellow-green buildings and slate roofs of a village, with a church, 
show faintly in the distance. The sky presents a fluster of clouds with 
intervals of blue. 


Signed at the lower left: P. J. Cuays. 


No. 84 
JEAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE COROT 


FRENCH 
(1796-1874) ah 
LA CHAUMIERE AUX SUREAUX, NORMANDIE 
¢ Poy coud | Height, 18 inches ; Length, 2 ee <A 


PROMINENT on the right of the foreground are two sturdy, straight birch 
stems. The one on the left shows against a compact mass of foliage sprinkled 
with the heart-shaped leaves and white and rose blossoms of a vine. The 
space between the stems is occupied by the twisted limbs of an apple tree. 
They are seen against the triangular roof of a farm-house, at the apex of 
which is a chimney. In the shadow of the open door a person is discernible, 
apparently in conversation with two women who stand just outside. To the 
right of the door is the circular stone parapet of a well, over which is a wind- 
lass protected by a wooden hood. Farther to the right and nearer to the 
foreground a woman in a lovely blue-green gown is seated on the grass 
beside adog. The rear of the scene, on the right, presents a tangle of trees, . 
showing intervals of sky, blue as a robin’s egg, and silted over with white 
and pale dove-colored clouds. 


Signed at the lower left: Corot. 

Collection of Mapame vr Knyrr, Paris. 

Collection of Atsert Wotrr, Paris. 

Collection of Witty Buumentuat, Paris. 

Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1903. 


Described in ‘‘L’ Euvre de Corot,’’? by Atrrep Roasut and Morgau-Nitaton. No. 2036. 


— 


a 


-CLAIRIERE 


* : 

‘i - 
3 Mis 
+ a 
“ : 


CATALOGUE No. 35 


ZAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE COROT 


No. 35 
JEAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE COROT 
FRENCH 
(1796-1874) 

CLAIRIERE 


Height, 16 inches; Width, 1234 inches. 


CE oe a ee ne Coareaanache 


On the left of the foreground in a fae girl is reaching up to pick 
something from a bushy mass of dark olive foliage, flecked with paler green. 


There is a bright yellow spot on her cap, and a glint of white shows in her 
kerchief, which is worn over a dress of brownish material. To her right the 
grassy foreground, starred with white flowers, is interrupted by a little pool 
that reflects in tones of gray and blue the cloud-sprinkled sky. A yellow 
glow illuminates the grass in the middle distance, beyond which are dull 
olive-colored woods, backed by pale blue hills. The right of the foreground 
is closed in with a clump of trees, about the stems of which cluster a 
light green vine and another vine with red leaves. This group forms an 
impressive mass of foliage that catches the light upon its top and lifts itself 
in tranquil dominance against the sky. Its base is fringed with delicate 
sprays of leafage. 


Signed at the lower right ; Coror. 
Collection of M. E. More, Paris, 1888. 
Collection of M. Vittarv, Paris, 1903. 


Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1903. 


FOREST, VILLE D'AVRAY 


a 


. CAMILLE COROT 


AN BAPTI 


CATALOGUE No. 36 


= ee “i es = ry _ f< 
" ae mak os 
joe ae he ' 
Oe a pa 
A Pg » ae kt 4) 
ay ee as 
:" 
‘No. 36 =a eaP 3 


JEAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE conor oe , 
FRENCH © : 


(1796- 1874) 


A ROAD IN THE FOREST, VILLE D'AVRAY 


Height, 1234 inches ; Length, 16 inches. 


ie " Nasedlsn ere 
v rae © 5 Sy a 


A GREEN sward, forming a roadway, extends from the foreground to the 
middle distance, where it dips out of sight. Here its edge is rimmed with © 
yellow light, which also illuminates the bushes and young trees that sur- | 
mount the bank on the left of the open grass. In contrast, the undergrowth 
and clump of trees on the right are in cool shadow. Their dark, olive-green 
mass, sprinkled with paler leaves, is cut by two slim tree-trunks. The dis- - 
tance is closed in with a blue-lavender wooded hill surmounted by a single 
poplar which rises against a sky of egg-like whiteness that changes to a — 
faint bluish-gray above. On the left of the roadway, in the foreground, 
a child, in purplish-drab dress, stands looking up into the face of a woman 
who holds a baby. Her costume consists of a yellow cap, scarlet kerchief 
and slaty iron-colored skirt, looped up over a white petticoat. The whole 
is permeated with a feeling of exquisite purity and freshness. 


Signed at the lower right : Corot. 
Collection of M. tz Duc pe Norponne-Peet, Paris, 1902. 


Purchased from Boussop, VaLtapon & Co.. Paris, 1903. 


FRANCOIS DAUBIGNY 


UE No. 37 


ame ce | No. 87 
CHARLES FRANCOIS DAUBIGNY 
= FRENCH | res 
~ (1817-1878) 
LANDSCAPE. WITH RIVER 


Height 9% inches ; Length, 14% inches. 


ae3od-* oe moe of & Vi . 


THE scene in its simple picturesqueness and sweet serenity is oe a 
of French river landscape. Bordered on the right by tall, loose grass, inter- 
spersed with white and rose-colored flowers, a sandy road leads back from : 
the foreground. It terminates on the bank of the river, whose grayish- blue 5 
water, dappled with white and gray reflections, extends from left to right. 
Toward the right lies a barge, with a red pennant flying from its masthead 
and a man standing at the tiller. Hard by appears another man in a row- 
boat. Extending from the left, a row of poplars borders the opposite bank. — 

It stops abruptly near the center, revealing on the right an irregular slope a 
of fields, dotted with trees and extending back to a few roofs which are — 
seen faintly against the horizon. Over it layers of creamy-white cloud- 
tufts stretch across the pale gray-blue sky, in which five birds are fying 
in a line. 


Signed at the lower left: Daupiany, 1860. 
Collection of M. Hieme.saver, Paris. 


Purchased from Tuvrsco Fries, Paris, 1903 


‘No. 38 


CHARLES FRANCOIS DAUBIGNY 


FRENCH 


(1817-1878) 
A PACk DONKEY 


Height, 6 inches ; Length, 934 inches. 


2s mn Gtearker db amy 


TueE donkey occupies the foreground, standing in profile with his head 
toward the left. On his back is a buff-drab saddle, with front and rear 
pommel, from which a pannier hangs. The latter casts a deep shadow on 
his flank, in contrast with the white of the valley. The yellowish-green 
meadow in which he is shown terminates in a hedge of trees. The picture 
suggests the determination of the artist to prove that, when he chose to rely 
upon objective vision, he could be as much at home as in his subjective 
moods. If so, he has succeeded, for the naturalness with which the animal 
is rendered could scarcely be surpassed. 


Signed at the lower left: Dausiany. 
Collection of M. Cuenarn, Paris. 


Purchased from Trepvxsco Freres, Paris, 1903. 


“le de > ~ ao ee 


No. 39 


NARCISSE VIRGILE DIAZ DE LA PENA 
FRENCH 
(1807-1876) 

THE FAGGOT GATHERER, FONTAINEBLEAU 


Height, 634 inches; Length, 9 inches. 


ee Bin Vi athe 


THE foreground shows a pasture dotted with tufts of rushes and coarse 
grass. Some distance back, toward the left, two young oaks unite their 
foliage into a single mass. To the right of them, coming along a path, is 
a woman carrying a fagot. She is clad in a white cap, slaty-blue waist and 
bluish-gray skirt. Behind the plane in which she appears, a cool light 
spreads across the meadow. The latter is bounded by two clumps of yel- 
lowish-green trees, in the interval between which, beyond a low hedge, 
stretches another meadow. ‘The sky is pearly-gray, with cream and dove- 
gray clouds. The little picture conveys an impression of great spaciousness 
and vigorous naturalness. 


Signed at the loner right: N. D. 
Collection of M. Gotpscumipt, Paris. 


Purchased from Tepvesco Frkres, Paris, 1903 


No. 40 
JULES DUPRE 


FRENCH 
(1812-1889) 


A BRITTANY FARM, ISLE-ADAM 


oe J Waiks cv Height, 18 inches ; Vane : (Pigs 


Back on the left appears a high-pitched roof, covered with Sresniahedeae “i 
moss and weather stains, from which rises a single red chimney. The wall : ; 
beneath it, brown-shadowed under the eaves, catches a bright light. — ‘The 

farm-house is cut by a tall tree, whose gleaming white stem is atte 
at intervals by bunches of soft, warm green foliage. Toward the top its 
spreads into irregularly-twisted branches, plumed with foliage, | that lift the a . 
humbleness of the scene to a suggestion of dominant authority. To the | 
right of the house is a rude gate, flanked by a hedge, beyond which appear 
a willow and two young oaks. In front of the hedge, on the right, lies. a0 
cream and reddish cow, near which sits a woman, dressed in a turquoise — AM : 
skirt, black waist and white cap. The sky surges in volumes of bluish- ay a 
white cloud, the light of which is reflected in a ee ‘Roel in the shadowed % om ? 
foreground. 2 


= 


Signed at the lower right: J. Dupri. 
Collection of M. Brertranp, Paris. 


Purchased from Teprsco Fréres, Paris, 1908. 


CATTLE AT THE POOL 


‘JULES DUPRE 


CATALOGUE No. 41 


No. 41 
JULES DUPRE 
FRENCH 
(1812-1889) 
CATTLE AT THE POOL 
Te degen Height, 25% inches ; Lengjh, 82 inches. 0 


RIsING out of a mass of bushes in the center of the composition a handsome 


oak spreads its white limbs, profusely clothed with golden-brown and warm | 4 


green foliage against the bright blue of a sky which at the sides is piled with 
white cumuli. The hues of the foliage are reflected on the surface of a 
pool which spreads to the front. A cow stands at the back of the water 
drinking while two others are pausing on the left bank. Their bodies catch 
the glow of the evening sun. Behind them appears a woman in a dark © 


shawl and white cap and skirt. The golden and brownish-greens of the — 3 | 
meadow on the left extend back to a small bushy tree and a bare trunk, _ 


beyond which the vista terminates in a low-level hill that melts into the deep 
greenish-blue horizon. In the middle distance on the right stands a clump 
of young willows in shadow. The whole scene is bathed in the solemn tran- 
quility of approaching sunset. 


Signed at the lomer right: Jutes Duprf. 
Collection of M. Curusrrtson, London. 
Collection af M. Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1903. 


Purchased from Scorr & Fowies Company, New York, 1908. 


=_ 


CONSTANT TROYON 


CATALOGUE No. 42 


~~ 
> 


as 
+ 


4 No. 42 = 
CONSTANT TROYON 
FRENCH 


(1810-1865) 


A WHITE Bs RED OX 


coe SOs ve Height, 18 4 ines Leah 21% ey 


A HEAVILY built white ox, flecked with red, stands looking away frome ae P 


spectator, its body exposed three- -quarters to the front. Its huge frame, 
rendered with extraordinary naturalness and vigor, is enveloped in a ‘soft = ; 
bluish-gray shadow, the evening glow meanwhile partially illuminating = a: 
the neck, shoulder and hip, rimming the legs with light and irradiating the: cam 
plume of hair at the end of the tail. It stands on a patch of buff- brown 
earth, beyond which is a stretch of yellow-green grass, bounded by a screen 
of grayish-green trees. The sky is sprinkled with creamy clouds, fora > : 
‘in an amber atmosphere. In the warm glow of late afternoon the meadow _ 
is lulled to tranquility, and the Shed bulk of the animal stands out with 
magnificent assertion. : 


Signed at the lower right: Vente Troyon. 
Exhibited at the Centennial Exposition of Modern French Art, 1889. 
Collection of M. Coque.in, Paris. 


Purchased from Trvrsco Freres, Paris, 1903. 


WB iis, Se 


oa 


ARABS | HUNTING IN THE DESERT ; - 
/ ee ges 


on a bay horse, holds by a leash a cream-coldred and a fawn ioc 
His shoulder and arm are bare, his body being swathed in rosy crimson, Ba + 
while a white mantle is bunched upon his back. He sits on his bees 
horse with an air of easy and assured dignity. Behind him an attendant, 
dressed in blue, is in charge of a dun horse. To the right of this group 
another Arab, wrapped in white and riding a white horse, converses with an a : 
man on foot who holds a bay horse and a gray one. In the middle distance, 
on the right, the ground rises to a slight elevation, while in the farther 
distance blue mountains lie against a greenish-blue horizon. The hue of 
the sky is reflected in a strip of water on the right of the foreground, the 
edge of which is iatiied mace thin bunches of reedy growth. 


v* 


Signed at the lower left : Eas: Faoxexom, 
Collection of the Count ARMAND DE : PRACOMTAL, Paris. 


Purchased from Boussop, Vauapon & Co., Paris, 1903. 


CATALOGUE No. 44 


ah 


EMILE VAN -MARCKE 


FRENCH SCHOOL 


as 1827- 1800) 


PAS TURE NEAR TREPORT 


gth, 16% inches. Pte x 
the = 


ey, no.e? Height, 11 inches 5 : 


with her back toward the spectator but Frit her head to the front. 1 
the middle distance of the pasture stand side by side two ponies, they: 
nearer one being a dun with creamy mane and tail. Over on the right of | ia 
the foreground lies a very dark brown cow, with white markings. The sky a 
is filled with ragged clouds, white and lavender and slaty-gray, that hang 
darkest over a hill on the left, which is smitten by a gleam of pallid yelloy 
light. Its white is reflected in a little patch of water on the right of the 
en QI The whole scene is brisk with piece mer mo 


impression of robust vitality reaches its climax in the magnificent widen a 
someness of the sturdy cattle. 


Signed at the lower right: Fm. Van Marckn. ; 
Collection of Dr. W. Werp, Paris, who acquired the picture direct from the artist. agen | 
Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1903. . 


cats 


Teer 


ee 


No. 


45 


EUGENE FROMENTIN 


FRENCH 


(1820-1876) 


A YOUNG ARAB—‘‘LA HALTE” 


PANEL 


Height, 18 inches ; Width, 13 sian YW / : 
“a 2 j [4 y 
Sie eo WS Ba pot The 


THE central figure is that of a hand- 
some young Arab, mounted on a 


brown horse whose glossy coat shows 


purple in the light. The rider wears 
a yellowish-white burnoose, red vest 
and dark blue breeches. His bare, 
bronzed arms rest on the front and 
back of the saddle, as the man turns 


to speak to a companion. The lat- 


ter’s head appears from behind the 
neck of a white horse, whose rump is 


toward the spectator. Some distance 
back on the left, a cloaked man is @ 


leading a gray horse. Blue mountains 
show beyond, piled against a creamy 
sky which becomes blue at the zenith. 


Signed at the loner lefi: Eva. Fromentin. 


Collection M. Taxsourter, Paris, 1882. 


Collection of Dr. Cornetius Herz, London, 1899. 


Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 


1903. 


‘EUGENE LOUIS GABRIEL ISABEY 


"FRENCH = 
7 (1804-1880) . 
AUBERGE DE L’ECU DE FRANCE Ee 
= | Height, 1494 inches ; Widih, 12 inches. ek 
2 lg ri . ; pane, [/ (7. Vik 
ae ae background is dectpek by the front of the/ French country, 


its sign on a swinging board, “TL” Keu de France.’’ a eh a 


Por adene toilette, pointing her way with a fan. She is follo 
another in eee who is mounting the eageetee steps. Behind her c 


of the same hue. Meanwhile the landlord in white apron stan ol 
ground to the left of the steps. A hare and duck hang beside the 
window, and another duck lies head downward on the ledge. 


Signed at the lower right in monogram and dated,’46. 
Purchased from Artuur Tootu & Sons, New York, 1893 


at ae PAUL JEAN CLAYS 


BELGIAN 
(1819-1900) 


LE SCHELDT, LILLO, PRES D’' ANVERS 
/ peers” Height, 22 inches ; Width, 1634 inches. ee, ga (p 
THE scene presents the anchorage off Lillo, a fishing village that lies below 
Antwerp, on the river Scheldt. Near the center ride two sailing vessels. 
-The decks of both are dotted with figures. In front, a little to the right, a 
boat is crossing the water, rowed by a single oarsman. On the left of the 
foreground is a mass of shipping, the spars of a bark appearing above the 
tawny sails of fishing-smacks. Between these two groups of shipping are 
visible distant houses, above which rise the roof and spire of a church. In 
the distance on the right are fishing-smacks and the faint suggestion of a 
tug-boat. The sky is piled high with volumes of white vapor, showing 
intervals of blue. 


Signed at the lower right: P. J. Cuays. 
Purchased from Witu1amM Scuavus, New York, 1899. 


ele 


| : No. 48 e 
MARTIN RICO fe. 
SPANISH i < 
(Anour 1850-1908) = . 

‘VENICE CANAL | 


ry ae cin ee 
{20 O- Height; 28 inches ; Width,.18%6 euches, 


THE perspective of the narrow canal is crossed halfway back | sl I 
bridge of metal work. In the center, leaning over the ruil, are two 
bova whom a woman in “white is epproaching. Near the ascent to the : 


old palace, with ieee pointed in the Venetian-Gothie style. On the 
top of the adjoining house appears a raised gallery, protected by an awning, 
while a crimson drapery, hanging over the balustrade, makes a brilliant spot 7 
against the blue sky. A gondola is moored on the right of the foreground, . 
near a stone archway, and beyond the bridge lie three more gondolas, i in one — 
of which is a man. Beyond this point the canal disappears, as it takes a — 
turn, the vista being closed in by a sprinkling of green leafage and the 2 
picturesque irregularity of dwelling houses, above which rise the gable end > 
and turret of a church. The scene sparkles with brilliant colors under a 
cloudless sky. 


Signed on the brickwork near the lower right : Rico. 
Imported by M. Knorpier & Co., New York, 1897. 
Collection of D. W. Powsrs, New York, 1899. Catalogue No. 25. 


. ae ee oe a 
ale CATALOGUE No. 49 


¥ Lore 

we ‘s 
— 
“jy 
a 
* 73, A 

am tf 
F 
4. 


: with fodder, o on coe a row of os ee 

ness of their attitudes i is characteristic of tist’, 
| sheep life. In front of this line three sheep stand facing 
- which occupies the a Deeg ae seem to be ae 


on the right. | 

scattered loosely over. the fiGor , 

three more stand near the lamb, and still another appea near 
| toward the right of the barn. eS ae ate See 


Signed at the lower TER. : a JACQUE. 
Collection oe the Baron DE Menasce, eal 
Collection of MapamMeE Ginanp, Paris. Saya oS 


Pas cheaed Seas Ghocce Perr, Paris, 1903. 


cage 4 al se 


‘ALOGUE No. 50 


No. 50 
MME. MARIE DIETERLE 
(DAUGHTER OF EMILE VAN MARCKE) 
FRENCH 
(1860- —) 


| CATTLE IN THE MEADOWS  ————,_s—S 
/ 600" | ieee) Upp 


Height, 24 inches ; Length, 2934 inches. 


A Poo., fringed with rushes and flowering plants, occupies the foreground. ay 
Standing with her forefeet in the water is a white cow, marked with black eth _— 
on the ears and nose and around the eyes. She is on the alert, as if some- 1 % 
thing unusual were intruding. Beside her, facing us, is a dun-red calf, with = Z 
white shaggy forehead. Its gaze also is fixed intently toward the front. == 
From the right another cow, reddish-brown, with white forehead, is ap- 2 x. 
proaching, head down, to drink. Further back, on the left, stand a dark — a = 

brown and a black cow. They are beside some willow trunks which spread _ Ms : 
their soft green foliage in a mass that fills the left upper half of the compo- | 

sition. Across the meadow in the distance, on the right, where it terminates 
-in a hedge, overtopped with a few trees, appear other cattle. The sky is — - 
choked with drab-white volumes of vapor, showing scanty intervals of 


pale blue. The whole scene is alive with the spontaneous reality of nature. 


) 


Signed at the lower left: Marie Dinter.e. 


“VABREUVOIR 
_ ADOLF SCHREYER — 


CATALOGUE No. 51 


a e2 “ 
Cer io ye 
‘ad J : ; 
ae 
= 
} 4 
a ° 


No. 51 

as ADOLF SCHREYER 
GERMAN 
eae 


L'ABREUVOIR) _~ — 
se ee het ae ak 


Height, 20%4 inches ; Length, 32% inches. 


mee, ae 


THE scene represents one of the watering stations in the desert. In the = 
center of the group, gathered about it, is an Arab, swathed in white, 
seated upon a white horse whose trappings are rose-colored, while a yellow be 
drapery with crimson cord and tassels is suspended from the pommel of the <a 


saddle. The horse stands facing a square stone tank, which projects 
from a domed building built over the spring. It shows the marks of age, 


vine growths clustering over the masonry. At the left a man on foot is 3 


arranging a rose-colored saddle upon a gray horse whose head rests onthe __ = 
back of a chestnut which is drinking. His musket and saddle-bag lie = | 
beside the shallow water which extends across the foreground. On the right ae 
of the composition a mounted Arab rides up toward the fountain and in the 
distance appears another leading a pack-horse. The sky is a greenish-blue, 


with light fleecy clouds. 


Signed at the lower right : Ap. SCHREYER. 
Collection of M. Pauturr, Paris. 


Purchased from Grorcrts Petit, Paris, 1903. 


CATALOGUE No. 52 


ALBERT NEUHUYS 


" a _ 
Ler 


round table, reading to a child. She moves her finger along the lines of 


No. 52 


ALBERT NEUHUYS | 
DUTCH at s : 
DI VIDED IN TEREST 


Height, 22 inches; With, 17 Ki my ¥e 


In a Dutch kitchen whose hits walls, Sinica with tones of drab, gray and 
olive, are lighted from a window on the left, a young woman is seated ata ; B 


print and is deeply engrossed in the labor of the task. Meanwhile the little” 
one, nestling up to her, leans forward with elbows on. the table, fidgeting | 
its fingers and apparently little interested in the book, but with eyes fixed ae 
on a doll which is in a tub that stands on the floor beneath the window. a 3 
The young woman wears a black cap, ashy- purple tippet and greenish-blue a4 ; 
skirt. The child’s dress is red. One little foot in its wooden shoe rests 0 on a 
bar of the chair. 


Signed at the loner right : Aus. Nevnuys. 


4a 
a 
* 
Pi 
= 
i 
5 
: 


\N FEEDING A CAT 


Sawt 
% 


ee pete 
SF do 
<= fins ae 


Height, 28 33% ‘males ge 28 6 in 


eronane his Bre to. the outside world, the | 
feebly through a small window at the left of the iitch ] 
whose gray hair forms a shaggy fringe above - his ; 
filling his pipe from a metal tobacco. box, meanwhile zing 


5 hee 


floor, where a black cat is feeding « out: of an Heathens B 


a dark pelle a He | 
of the hearth. ‘Painted i in 1900. ep % seek Rea “ Eye 


Signed at the ae ee ‘Jose Isnaits, ore a oe ce ae ee t; i 0 1 eee 


Purchased pat Franz Burra & Zornen, The Piece 1903. 


c + oe Creu J : van 
Be a 
% 


AL OF ST. MARK, VENICE 


ee. to Eto 
; ss 


eet oa eS es 


CATALOGUE No. 54 


a7 


No. oo ok : _ 
FRITZ THAULOW == 
NORWEGIAN peter = ; = ieee 

(1847. 1906) Beat ae : oe 3 

CATHEDRAL OF ‘ST. MARK, VENICE 


yee Z Se oe 25% ‘inches ; Length, 3154 ¢ 


Ve. 


AGAINST a deep blue ay pricked with stare the facade of St. Mark’: | 
-on the right. On the left of the picture two of the crimson flagstaffs ay te 
mounted upon bases. which consist of three steps. On the geometrically 
designed pavement, in front of the entrance, stands a solitary man | : 

the cathedral. Between him and it the space is animated with gre 
moving figures, extending back to the buildings which enclose the: ’ 
on the left. . 3 


a “i ‘ "i by 
Signed at the lower right: Fritz THautow. ; 


Purchased from M. Knorpirr & Co., New York, 1899. 


Fae 


AMERICAN 


= | ed 6 Cy eee 


_ROLLEBOL SE 


High, BEM inches: Length, 3134 made Ho. lane 


ae a. in “ie houses whose teaeti roofs extend along the foothills that 
oe ae me enclose the background. These border the river, which flows thence to the 
Coie aa aah of the foreground, where its bank is gay with pnts yellow and 


4% 


“i 


“Nor 56 | | es 
“EMILE VAN, MARCKE Sao 


- FRENCH | SCHOOL 


Fy 


Mi , 


2. 
ve 
iy 
oR 
‘vd 


es 
wit 


« ear 
2 r Ly 
' iow 
; P 
Y > *s id 
% TAG 
eva ae Say, 
i ‘7 rt ee 


CUS EE 


4. RED COW. <2 


Od GE oa 3 Height, 22% oe Lote ke 


MovineG across the foreman with characteristically lumbering oan ig 
fine dun-red cow, with white markings: on the forehead, cheeks, ridge of the a 3 
back, belly and legs. The creature’s structural bulk and the texture of howe ) 

pelt are realized with extraordinary veracity. The glow of the westerly sun : 
lights the top of her body and illumines the whiteness of her cheek, casting 
a long shadow before her on the grass. Two other cows appear farther — rl 
back in the pasture, which extends on the left to a few trees and on the <a 

right to a gently sloping hill. The sky is greciuste plus, graying toward 
the‘ horizon. 3 


a 


Signed at the lower right: Em. Van Mancxe. 
Collection J. ve Kuyprer, The Hague. 


Purchased from Franz Burra & ZoreneN, The Hague, 1903. 


No. 57 
HENRI HARPIGNIES — 
FRENCH 
(1819- —) 
BY THE SEA SHORE 


my : od 
of Ss OO Height, 2134 ma sors tpahe 


| 


2 


APIA 

A LITTLE stream, reflecting the sky’s blue, threads its way through the fore- 
ground between banks of rock. The farther one is shaped like a wall, 
beyond which a strip of the open sea is visible, with the smoke of a steamer 
on the horizon. On the left of the foreground grows a mass of grayish- 
green foliage, against which appear the white stems of three trees. On the 
opposite side another mass of silvery-brown leafage is intersected by tree- 
trunks. The sky, blue overhead, whitens toward the horizon, where it is 
streaked with lake and golden yellow. ‘The atmosphere is laden with the 
freshness of the sea. 


Signed and dated at the lower left: H. Harpienizs, ’98, 
Purchased from ArtHuR Tootu & Sons, 1903. 


Ve 


y CAVALRY CHARGE 


kk & §F30 


ADOLF_ SCHREYER 
GERMAN = 
Cases. 1800) =. 


AN ARABIAN CAVALRY CHARGE 


a uA Og. _ Height, 23% inches ; sci 73 seeks. Vin. ays ao 


THREE Arabs, riding abreast, are charging from the right of the scene. a 


The central figure, mounted on a dun horse, i is in white, with a yellowish-red — ar 


and white head dress. His companion on his left, riding a dark bluish-gray 
and clad in a dull rose-red cloak, carries a furled flag which bears gold and 
blue devices on a red ground. While the chief’s keen glance is directed — 
ahead of him, the standard bearer turns his bronzed and bearded face over 
his left shoulder, as if expecting a flank attack. Their horses are brilliantly — 
caparisoned in trappings of blue and rose. Behind the three foremost horse- — 
men extends a long line of warriors, followed by others half obscured ie 
the dust. In the background undulating hills show softly against the blue 
sky. The troop is advancing across a foreground scattered with stones and 
scanty vegetation. _ 


Signed at the lower right: Ap. ScHREYER. 


Purchased from M. Knorpirr & Co., New York, 1899. 


n, 
A " 
ky 

aa 7 


al 


-WILLEM MESDAG 


UE No. 59 


ALOG 


1 


Cal 


No. 59 = 
HENDRIK WILLEM MESDAG | 


DUTCH 
(1851-75. *) 


*- UNLOADING THE FISHING BOAT 
i / 1 ee war SJ ae Height, 27 inches ; sg ee 
In thie shallow water, on the right, two carts are pie Be up thnk ‘hee 
slaty-drab hull of a fishing boat with pale blue gunwale. The rope of hei ae | 
bow anchor trails above the water. She belongs in Scheveningen, as th : 
letters on her yellowish-olive sail denote, Five men appear aboard her. ‘a 
One of the carts, with a white horse in the shafts, is painted blue, with red 
wheels. The other, already filled with nets, is drawn by a team. In charge — oe 
of each a man stands in the water. Two more sailboats, with slackened ce 
sails, lie farther back on the left, and three, with sails taut, dot the dis 
tance. The tide, as it runs out, heaves with smooth horizontal rise and fall, 
stained with the gray and primrose and pale blue of the gusty sky. Th 
clouds are banked over the horizon and rise in volumes on the right, while 
above the sky is streaked. 


Signed at the lower right: H.W. Mespaa, 1903. 


Purchased from Franz Burra & Zornen, The Hague, 1903. 


No. 60 


MLLE. ROSA BONHEUR 


FRENCH 


(1822-1899) 


HEAD OF A DONKEY 


OO g: ad Height, 39% inches; Width, 25 mao 


A DONKEY with ears erect is presented 
full face to the spectator. The body is 
seen only as far as the chest, the main 
feature being the animal’s head, which 
occupies almost the entire height of the 
canvas. ‘The nozzle is covered with fine 
white hair and encircled by the strap of 
the halter. Above this the hair is coarse 
in texture and in parts matted, being of a 
rich brown, passing into tan around the 


eyes. The latter have an expression of , . 
drowsy inertness, which is repeated in % 


the ears, notwithstanding their erectness. 
The nostrils are slightly expanded, the 


suggestion of their fleshiness admirably | J 


rendered. In fact, the skill with which 
all the characteristics of the head are 
represented, added to its being life-size, 
invests it with extraordinary naturalness. 


Signed at the lower lefi: R. B. 


GE anal 


No. 61 


JULES ADOLPHE BRETON 


FRENCH 
(1827-1906) 
SPRING TIME 
C74 POEs Height, 3734 inches ; 31% OG Ave 
eid 


A PEASANT girl, facing us, bends over hoe, as she works in a patch of 
yellow-green grass in which a few daffodils are flowering. Her head is 
bound with a white handkerchief that is crossed with two bands of red. 
She wears a waist of lavender-pink material which leaves her arms bare to 
above the elbows, and her skirt, looped up over an olive-brown petticoat, is 
a deep peacock- blue. Her ankles are bare, the feet being shod with leather | 


shoes, strapped across the instep. While the girl’s figure is sturdy and 


supple, her head droops wearily over her right shoulder, and her eyebrows 
are arched with an expression of fatigue. Some little way back on the right 
stands a clump of young trees, one of which is sprinkled with white blos- 
soms. In the distance a wood shows faintly against the pale blue of the 
sky, which is silted over with grayish vapor. 


Signed at the lower right: Jutes Breton, 1902. 
Exhibited at the Salon, Paris, 1902. 
Purchased from M. Knoepizr & Co., New York, 1903 


. Sia 


No. 62 


--MLLE. ROSA BONHEUR 


FRENCH 


(1822-1899) 
. A PERCHERON DLK nr : 
ao *° Pope f 
f ; Height, 3034 inches ; Length, 39% inches. 
A sTockiLy built Percheron stallion, his dark brown coat glossy with 


purplish-gray lights, stands across the picture. He is fastened by the reins 
of the bridle to a ring on the right of a whitish-drab wall which forms the 


background. A sheaf of corn lies on the ground beneath his head. 


Signed at the lower left: Rosa BonuEvur, 
Purchased from M. Knoepier & Co., New York, 1899. 


7 No. 68 : 
DANIEL RIDGWAY KNIGHT — ie 
AMERICAN 
(1838-.) | 
GOSSIPS—ON THE FOOTBRIDGE 
SSOOCCE Height, 26 inches ; Lepgth, 82 inches roy. 


Two girls have encountered on a wooden bridge that leads from tie fr mt 
across a reedy stream. One of them, who leans back to the rail with : 
hands on it, is dressed in a yellowish-brown jacket and a lavender, crimson = 
dotted skirt rolled up over a brownish-red petticoat. She inclines her face — 
with a smile toward her companion who has set down her basket and stands 
with left hand resting on her hip. Her costume consists of a lavender-rose a 
waist, plum-gray skirt and a petticoat of silvery-red. Behind the two | a 
figures is a massof | greenery which mingles with the silvery-gray foliage. of ie 
two willow trees growing on the edge of the opposite bank. Their reflec- co ; 
tions are mirrored in the stream, which on the left of the bridge presents as he 
smooth expanse of lighted surface, dyed with the tints of the sky. On each 
side of the footbridge, in the foreground, is a bunch of plants with yellow 2g 
blossoms. 'The meadow across the water, glowing yellow in the sunshine, — a 
extends back to a distant line of cottages and trees, beyond which are faint 
lavender hills. 


Signed at the lower left: Ripaway Knieut, Paris. 


Purchased from M. Knorpier & Co., New York. 


on No. 64 ee 
‘JEAN LEON cinOME oe 
o? FRENCH Se . : es peas. foot 
“(a824-1908)_ | | 


“ON GUARD 7 TI GRESS- AND CUBS 


Soke sO. oo Height, ak ria Sieg S) 39 inches. eee bs i; 


On the left of itfe: aly foreground a tigre sits erect, watching over : 
two cubs as they drink from a water-course. The torrent has shrunk wit : 
its rocky bed until it is only a narrow stream, reflecting the blue of the pe 

and the green of some date palms, which lift their fan-shaped plumes abo 
a thick inderzrowts of gray-green ‘bushes and small trees. Between * 


the foot of a lavender-pink hill, scored with violet and mauve > shadows in its 
fissures. Beyond this and closing in the right of the composition is a 
mountain of slaty-gray rock formation, bare of vegetation and precipitous. A 
Rising from its base in two tiers, resembling bastions, it has a suggestion — 
of grandeur, which increases the impression of solitude that pervades the | 
whole scene. ; 


Signed at the lower right: J. L. Giréme. 


2 


r. Prices. in the enirused yellow light, three red 
Ae are eS orcked out with sharp distinctness. The bridge 
iver from the right of the foreground, its abutment pierced by 
=e in the distance appears a glimpse of the town, with a factory 


lower right: Innzss, Jn., 1898. 


No. 66 


J. ROSSEAU 
FRENCH 
Contemporary 
A SETTER GN | (ie NaN ee 
Height, 25% inches ; Length, 32 inches. 


sat” oe SETTER is pointing across the foreground in the direction of the left. 
His color is white, with liver markings on the head, throat, back and root 
of the tail. The jaws are apart, exposing the quivering red tongue. He 
R % Stands in front of a mass of cool, green foliage, beyond which appears an 
is: “opening in the forest, where there is a yellow glow. 


/ 


No. 67 
RAIMUNDO DE MADRAZO 
SPANISH 
(1841- —) 


ogi ee = LA BELLE pA 
Height, 36% inches ; Width, 2534 inches. 


leaves. on the table stand a pewter plate and a tumbler half filled : 
with an amber-colored fluid from which a straw projects. \s ee 


Signed at the upper right: R. Maprazo. 
Collection of D. W. Powrrs, New York, 1899. Catalogue No. 120. 


FELIX ZIEM 


CATALOGUE No. 68 


. 


FRENCH 


(1821- 


ws VENICE, EARLY MORNING 
Z i | Se | oe 


Height, 29% inches ; Length, 42 inches. es 


THE sky, pale blue at the zenith, is ashimmer toward the ce 
‘im vapor that grows greener near the horizon. In the gloy 


: gail; eizcssed oe grouped about some piles of fruit and vege bl 
on a wharf in the foreground. Here a party of people, including 

din. nave landed from a gondola. The pageantry of color is bor 
; by a mass of shipping with golden-brown hulls and riggin 


amid wl whieh he and awning make two peer te gu of r rose. 


© 
te 
ier 
@) 
a 
As 


Eee 


~~ 


aot 
=. Be oe 


& Co., New York, 1899. 


CATALOGUE No. 69 


" 


“(asss, aided Cor | 
z = AN ARAB ‘CHIEF AND ESCORT 


i 


| Height, ss inches Lena, 18% inches. 


~ 


A CAVALCADE of Arabs‘ is on n the ae their costumes and the gay trapping: 
of their horses making a bouquet of subdued splendor across the foreground. = 
Their leader rides. at their head, alone, ‘mounted on a white horse dappled 
with gray, with a creamy mane and tail. It is champing at the bit and “an 
proudly arching its near foreleg. The rider, dressed in a rose-colored cap, 5 2 
primrose. jacket and gray trousers, supports the stock of his musket on his 
left hip. He is followed by five horsemen, one of whom carries a blue flag, | 
furled. Ahead of the chief, toward the left, rides a servant between a a 
bare-backed remount and a pack horse. While the leader’s head is seen — : ye 
against the blue sky, a low hill, covered with stunted bushes, forms a 
background to the other figures. — A few flowers sprinkle the foreground Cas 
scanty herbage, which is interrupted by bare spots of parched earth. 


Signed at the lower left : Av. Scureyer. 
Collection of ALFRED ScHwARZsCHILD, Frankfurt. 


Purchased from M. Goupscumipt & Co., Frankigr, 1903. 


- 


NCE TO PASTURE 


VAN MARCKE 


No. 70 
EMILE VAN MARCKE 


FRENCH SCHOOL 


(1827-1890) 


ENTRANCE TO PASTURE - on 
SER OOO: Te ae. he 


Height, 34% inches; Length, 46% inches. 


Ir is the milking hour and the warm, level rays of sunlight brighten the 
colors of the cows, which are trooping homeward. Driven in by the herds- 
man they are slowly advancing toward a wooden bridge which spans a stream 
that separates the farther pasture from the foreground. On the near side of 
it, attached to a high post, is a gate which is being opened by a woman, 
beside whom stands a dog. In the foreground stands a white calf, full in 
the sunshine, to the left of which is a black cow standing beside a red 
one with white markings lying down. A dun cow is crossing the bridge 
followed by a pale yellowish-brown one, following which are the remainder 
of the herd. Two trees, with sun-illumined foliage, stand at the right and 
left of the bridge, and at the rear of the farther meadow is a hill luxuriantly 
wooded. Above it is a stirring cluster of white clouds floating in the blue 
sky. The scene is impregnated with the serenity and wholesomeness of 
pastoral life. 


Signed and dated at the loner left: Em. Van Marckeg, ’76. 


Purchased from Franz Burra & Zornen, The Hague, 1903. 


wenivae” 


_ LE VIEUX SCRIBE 
_ JOSEF ISRAELS 


CATALOGUE No. 71 


No. 71 
JOSEF ISRAELS 
DUTCH 


( 1824- ) 


/ 0: Q00°" LE VIEUX at eee f én 


Height, 42% inches ; Length, 59% inches. 


In a dim interior, lighted by a window on the left, through which the 
sunshine struggles, coloring the glass a bluish-gray and streaking the wood- 
work with orange and cream, an old rabbi sits at a table, facing us. His 
- left hand is spread expressively on the scroll unfolded before him, while his 
right guides a quill with slow and conscientious deliberation. The high, 
narrow forehead is covered with a dark-olive skull-cap; the eyes look weak 
and tired; the nose is long and the under-lip pendulous, while the gray 
beard falls low down upon his yellowish-brown gabardine. Two crutches 
lean against the dull-olive tinted wall, which here projects, forming a shelf 
on which rest a book and some scrolls. A glass ink well stands near his 
right hand, and the other end of the scroll on which he works is held in 
place by a glass weight, near which a book and two quill pens are lying. The 
light illumines the old man’s face and pen-hand, emphasizing the expression 
of weariness in the one and the constrained feebleness of the other. 


Signed at the lower left: Josr¥ Isnakts, 1902. 
Exhibited at the Universal Exposition, Paris, 1904, when the artist received the Great Prize. 


Purchased from Boussop, Vatapon & Co., Paris, 1903. 


at (a es 


No. 72 


: ws FRENCH ; = : = 
Jes Oe  (1825- on a. aa wet 3 3 
| THE LITTLE PILFERERS 2 


ee hel 79 inches ; Width, 44 cee a = 


INSTIGATED presumably by the older sister, a little girl has been pilferiagd in 
an apple orchard. She is now on the top of the wall, one leg hanging down, 
clinging to the arms of her sister who is helping her to descend. The child, 
whose head presents a cluster of blond curls, is dressed in a fawn-coloea , 
skirt and a greenish-blue bodice, fastened with shoulder straps over a white 
chemisette. The older girl’s costume consists of a black bodice, laced ¢ 
behind, and a skirt, looped up so as to display its plum-red lining over | alee i 
greenish-blue petticoat. Her feet are bare, and near them lies a bsket 
filled with apples which are partly covered by a crimson handkerchief. Some — 
plants and a little bush cluster at the foot of the walk, from the top Gf Lim 
which, on the left, hangs a vine-spray. A profusion of leafage closes i in the 4 : 
PRC S St : aay 


Signed on the right of the mall, near the top: W. Bovcurrrau, 1872. 
Collection of D. W. Powrrs, New York, 1899. Catalogue No. 271. 


AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 


Managers. 
THoMAS E. Kirsy, 


Auctioneer. 


z 
te | 


eee 
oe 


- 
ee. 


=o 


in diy 


rect 


=o RI err. N. A., Joun Bunyan 
“ Old Wooden Bridge, Upper Connecticut 


CARR, Lyrry 
3 = a The White Mill 


iy CLAYS, Pav JEAN 
Calm on the Scheldt 
ue Lt Scheldt, Lillo, Prés d’Anvers 


COROT, JEAN Baptiste CAMILLE 
——sSLa Chaumiére aux Sureaux, Normandie 
os Clairiére 

A Road in the Forest, Ville d’Avray 


- DAUBIGNY, Cuaries Francois 
- Landscape with River 
A Pack Donkey 


- CATALOGUE 


NUMBER 


10 
16 


72 


61 


12 


13 


33 
AT 


34 
35 


¢ 86 


37 
38 


se. y 
ae, 


| ee ‘Hounds and ee Hounds 
| French Hounds — th tale 


_ DETAILLE, otis avers Kiowarp | 
A Soldier of the Guard 
Light Infantry Soldier 


DIAZ DE GA PENA, Nancisse VircILe 


The Fagot Saber, es 


_ DIETERLE, Mue. Marre . 
Cattle i in ‘the Meadows 


DUPRH, JuLEs | . 
A Brittany Farm, Isle-Adam 
Cattle at the Pool 2 


_FROMENTIN, EvucEne | 
Arabs Hunting in the Dax 
A. Young Arab—“La atale: 


_ FROST, A. B. 
A Friendly Drink 


GARZA, ALEXANDER P. 

Launching the Row Boat 
GEROME, Jean Liéow 

“On Guard”—Tigress and Cubs 


HARPIGNIES, Henet 
By the Sea Shore 


HART, N. A., Wikraaat 
Autumn Landscape and Cattle 


HENNER, Jzan Tacaves 
Jeune Fille Lisant 


~ HERNANDEZ, Dantex 


Waiting 


INNESS, N. A., Geonrce, Jr. 
Alcester Bridge, England 


aie: ; ; } ae 

A pee . bas eee 

Feeding a Cat 
i en Se ‘ 2 


ribe 
- 


AG, Pevoesn Wittem 
A Scheveningen Fishing Boat 
Unloading the Fishing Boat 


Fisher Girls 
+ oe) a 


ee fe MURPHY, N. A., J. Francis — 
a 
os + - Sundown 
ss NEUHUYS, Azzzrr 
By ee Divided Interest 
_——s« REMINGTON, A. N. A., Freperic 
4 Waiting for His Master 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


46 


53 
71 


49 


30 
63 


55 


67 


25 


29 
52 


17 


RICO, Martin 
Venice Canal 


ROSSEAU, J. i 2 ee Sigge 

__ A Setter > ae Sepsis: \ 

SCHENCK, Aveust Freveric ALBRECHT — +: nS ee at - 

Sheep in Snowstorm Sea a 

SCHREYER, Avotr rabies a | 
_ L’Abreuvoir ; 


An Arabian Cavalry hares: 
An Arab Chief and Escort 


SIMOSWIKY, A. 
| Meditation 
; | STEVENS, Aurzep 
Marine 
= THAULOW, Farrz é 
a | Cathedral of St. Mark, Venice 


if TROYON, Constant 
te A White and Red Ox 


VAN MARCKE, EmILe 
Pasture Near Tréport 
A Red Cow 
Entrance to Pasture P 


VIBERT, Jenan GeorcEs 
: A Young Cardinal 
The Discovered Hiding Place 


VON BLAAS, Evcren 
Ideal Head 
The Brunette 


WORMS, Jutzs 
Departure of a Spanish Trooper 


WYANT, N. A., ALExANDER H. 
A Gray Day 


ZIEM, Feux 
~ Venice, Early Moning. 


‘Tak = Ms ic% TS hoes 


ii 


. 


a a ee 


- 


